Sand Opera
Lenten Journey Day 29: Not Forgetting Guantanamo, “in the cell of else,” and
Danny Caine
Saying to
the prisoners: Come out!
To those in darkness: Show yourselves!
Along the ways they shall find pasture,
on every bare height shall their pastures be.
They shall not hunger or thirst,
nor shall the scorching wind or the sun strike them;
For he who pities them leads them
and guides them beside springs of water.
I will cut a road through all my mountains,
and make my highways level.
See, some shall come from afar,
others from the north and the west,
and some from the land of Syene.
Sing out, O heavens, and rejoice, O earth,
break forth into song, you mountains.
For the LORD comforts his people
and shows mercy to his afflicted.
But Zion said, “The LORD has forsaken me;
my Lord has forgotten me.”
Can a mother forget her infant,
be without tenderness for the child of her womb?
Even should she forget,
I will never forget you.
To those in darkness: Show yourselves!
Along the ways they shall find pasture,
on every bare height shall their pastures be.
They shall not hunger or thirst,
nor shall the scorching wind or the sun strike them;
For he who pities them leads them
and guides them beside springs of water.
I will cut a road through all my mountains,
and make my highways level.
See, some shall come from afar,
others from the north and the west,
and some from the land of Syene.
Sing out, O heavens, and rejoice, O earth,
break forth into song, you mountains.
For the LORD comforts his people
and shows mercy to his afflicted.
But Zion said, “The LORD has forsaken me;
my Lord has forgotten me.”
Can a mother forget her infant,
be without tenderness for the child of her womb?
Even should she forget,
I will never forget you.
--1
Isaiah 49
As
I’ve written earlier in this Lenten observance, 91 men continue to languish in
Guantanamo Bay prison, uncharged and unreleased, nearly 15 years after the so-called
War on Terror began, with no end in sight, thanks to a recalcitrant Congress
and a cowed public. The reading from the prophet Isaiah again calls for an
apocalyptic vision, a vision of utter transformation, when the prisoners will
be freed and the darkness will be turned to light, when no one will go hungry
and all shall be protected from the weather, when the mountains will be
passable and the highways will be level (perhaps these last two feats seem less
remarkable in the age of dynamite and steamrollers).
What
will it take for the prison doors to be opened and the light shed on what
happened there?
After
all, it was in Guantanamo Bay prison that the U.S. began its practices of so-called
“enhanced interrogation” (a euphemism for “whatever we can get away with and
still somehow not call torture, by playing with the idea that the legal
definition of torture until the very term became sapped of all meaning). The origins
of these practices goes back way farther than that, of course, into the
recesses of the Cold War (if not further than that), when various psychological
methods of torture were developed. One of those methods was exposing inmates to
constant light and sound over the course of many days, an experience which
gradually causes psychosis. In a perverse twist, Mohamedou Ould Slahi (the
author of the essential memoir Guantanamo Diary, written while in prison
and published in 2015) testified to being exposed to this treatment, including
having to listen to happy children songs like The Barney Theme Song and The
Sesame Street Theme Song, in addition to Drowning Pool’s “Bodies” and other more
obviously dark songs, a point that Danny Caine addresses in his essay below. It’s
strange to think, at the very time that my daughter was watching Barney on television,
Slahi was stuck in a cell, being tortured by that music, caught in the machinery
of empire. Slahi is still in the prison. “I shall never forget you,” Isaiah
promises, voicing God’s unremitting love.
In
addition to writing to your Congresspeople (and following campaigns such as http://www.closeguantanamo.org/Prisoners),
you can also write a letter to one of the prisoners in the Guantanamo Bay
prison. I’m going to write to Slahi today.
from “Hung
Lyres” (Sand Opera)
@
In the cell of
else / in the pitch-white
someone’s hands
shackled between ankles
in the nights
& sunny days keeping the clouds
shaking the rib
cage & no way
to keep the
music from entering & breaking
the bodies hit / Let
the bodies hit the / Barney
is a dinosaur / this is the touching without being
touched / this
is the being without
silence / from our imagination / in wave upon
wave / in a
shipping container & I love you
in a box of
shock you love me / in a cemented
dream / we’re a happy family /
with a great big hug and chains that leave no mark
Won’t you say you love me too?
“in
the cell of else” essay by Danny Caine
On
September 22, 2001, at the Fillmore Auditorium in Denver, Colorado, the first
of several annual Music as a Weapon tours played its initial date. Headlined by
nü-metal standouts Disturbed, it also featured Dallas metal band Drowning Pool,
best known for their song “Bodies.” You may remember it from the heady late-90s
peak of post grunge rap metal; its earworm chorus repeating “Let the bodies hit
the floor, let the bodies hit the floor” over and over again. Calling this the
“Music as a Weapon” tour surely was intended for little more than hard-rock
braggadocio. Yet during the war in Iraq, the US Army employed “Bodies” in
enhanced interrogation scenarios to wear down the will of Iraqi prisoners.
“Bodies,” and other songs, would be played over and over at unbearable volume
as lights flashed directly at the prisoners. It’s a technique inspired by Jim
Channon’s New Earth Batallion Manual, originally a project to incorporate New
Age Philosophy into the morale-slumped post-Vietnam Army. Only in this case, it
actually turned music into a weapon.
The
song most famously included in this particular Army experiment is “I Love You,
You Love Me,” from the children’s TV show Barney.
It, not “Bodies,” is the song that inspired a thousand smirking news reports of
the haha-soldiers playing haha-Barney for the haha-prisoners. Yet missing from
the jocular reports was the horror of transforming a force for good into a
method of inducing pain. Joke all you want about how “listening to Barney (or
Drowning Pool) is torture.” This is
the blatant misappropriation of a peaceful art into a weapon. Even Metal music,
while aggressive in posture, can be an inclusive and cathartic community.
Drowning Pool themselves have said, “‘Bodies’ was written about the brotherhood
of the moshpit and was never about violence.” Music is not a weapon. Even
“Bodies.” Music is an inspiration for embodied movement that even at its most
violent—for instance, in the moshpits of shows like the one at the Denver
Fillmore in September 2001—it is a vehicle for cathartic and peaceful release.
1 comment:
Prisoner number 760
had been forcibly broken.
Even the guards’ voices
ferried through plumbing
sounded heavenly after
815 days. The blindfold
still let in the bright light
at night; chains on ankles
tied to wrists tightened
with every “F-this and F-
that”, made it impossible
to stand and move. Hit so
hard my breath stopped,
hurt like never before, I
hoped I could stop moaning.
Technically, I couldn’t
speak, my lips grew so big.
Ice cubes stuffed between
clothes and skin helped
the pain, wiped out bruises.
Everything seemed to be
perfectly prepared for that
afternoon in the truck, on
a beach, in the boat, back
on land. Thirteen years
after, I didn’t know to cry.
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